Recent Public Posts - [guest]
| Fewer trains in the South West when nationalised? In "Looking forward - the next 2, 5, 10 and 20 years" [376188/32155/40] Posted by grahame at 08:03, 21st June 2026 | ![]() |
From the Wiltshire Times
Passengers across Wiltshire and the South West could face fewer train services under Labour’s rail nationalisation plans, according to the head of Great Western Railway’s parent company.
Graham Sutherland, chief executive of FirstGroup, which owns Great Western Railway (GWR), said cuts already being introduced on other parts of the rail network could become more widespread as the Government brings train operators under public ownership.
GWR, which serves Wiltshire, Bristol, Cornwall, Devon, Gloucestershire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Herefordshire and South Wales, is due to be nationalised on December 13 as part of the Government’s plans to create Great British Railways.
Mr Sutherland said timetable reductions being introduced by operators including Avanti West Coast and Thameslink were an early indication of how ministers may seek to reduce costs by matching train services more closely to passenger demand.
He said: “There are a lot of services running that really don’t have very much demand for them, so I think over the long term it’s right to begin to match supply and demand.”
Graham Sutherland, chief executive of FirstGroup, which owns Great Western Railway (GWR), said cuts already being introduced on other parts of the rail network could become more widespread as the Government brings train operators under public ownership.
GWR, which serves Wiltshire, Bristol, Cornwall, Devon, Gloucestershire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Herefordshire and South Wales, is due to be nationalised on December 13 as part of the Government’s plans to create Great British Railways.
Mr Sutherland said timetable reductions being introduced by operators including Avanti West Coast and Thameslink were an early indication of how ministers may seek to reduce costs by matching train services more closely to passenger demand.
He said: “There are a lot of services running that really don’t have very much demand for them, so I think over the long term it’s right to begin to match supply and demand.”
Sadly, I can't disagree with the risk. Much is unsaid in nationalisation plans - for example there is talk of "a more reliable" service but not of any sort of frequency, and these is talk of a "simplified fare system" without talk of better value / lower fares.
There used to be stats about half the stations generating only 5% of the traffic / income ...
| Re: How would YOU solve CrossCountry ? In "Across the West" [376187/32138/26] Posted by REVUpminster at 07:32, 21st June 2026 | ![]() |
You can't get a Cross Country train from Plymouth to Essex and East Anglia. You are expected to change in London (Crossrail has made that easier); so for Plymouth trains, why go further than Birmingham which could be the hub for the north. Maybe on a Saturday there is a justification for Penzance-Scotland but I doubt it.
| Re: Where am I this morning? 20th June 2026 In "The Lighter Side" [376186/32153/30] Posted by grahame at 07:20, 21st June 2026 | ![]() |
Austerlitz ... remains a building site in hall 1, and a dark cavern that makes New Street's platforms feel positively friendly in hall 2. And it seems to be the last bastion of loco-hauled and coaches operation. Gare de Lyon was all units - singles which I think can run in multiple, or running as multiples. I have seen electric locos on coaches / push-pull with driving trailers on the front when the loco is on the rear in many other countries.
To solve the picture - yesterday morning was Porto Torres Maratime on Sardinia Ferry arrived at 07:30, train left at 09:55 with a handful of people on board. I took a break at Sassari to travel on one of the few remaining narrow gauge lines on the island.
Sharing here what I wrote on Facebook
Smoking, Vaping, Drinking, Sunning, Sweating, Sheltering, Socialising. Living in apartment blocks surround by randomly parked vehicles wherever they fit, busy roads with vehicles perhaps cruising to find spaces. They may be nice inside, but the external aesthetics shout functionallity. Local culture - there may be some but the bar names and menus are in English.
Alghero is at the end of a narrow gauge railway that's not on my pass, but I visited for and extra £5 as it's one of the few remaining parts of the narrow network on Sardinia. Even this has been cut back to the top of the town - you can see where the tracks used to go.
Finding out the train times was a challenge. The line starts in Sassari, where the station has three working platforms and a ticket office labelled "We do not sell tickets for Alghero". The standard European departure sheets don't show these trains either. The "Sardinian Green Train" website tells us about the weekly special excursions on some of the otherwise abandoned lines where they are still passable. The ARST website (they run the narrow gauge trains) proudly concentrated on their buses, but I *had* actually found a timetable. Trains differ totally on Sundays from the rest of the week, but they are all in one table there than needs very careful reading. When I reached Sassari, I bought my ticket at the station newsagent and tobacconist kiosk - where the gent checked my timings an reassured me I was correct in my reading, and I could make a round trip before the next main line train, some 4 and a half hours later.
A modern 2 carriage train, and it would seem that while I had some problems knowing when it ran, others did not. Before we set off, it was full (almost) and some standing. Made me feel old - VERY old - young people off for a day on the beach, well behaved and laughing and joking between themselves. No-one got off at intermediate stations; more joined at Olmedo where we passed a train going the other way.
The station at Alghero has clearly seen better / busier days. Apart from the platform we arrived at, two others are rusted and there's other track work that hasn't seen a train, I suspect, this millenium. A crossover to allow run-rounds, and a turntable - redundant too now that the trains are current generation diesel units. An hourly service is possible with the loop half way, and that's probably more than enough. And I note that trains can be coupled and run in pairs.
I bought myself a can of cold Sprite in the station cafe. Two big fridges full of beer, blokes sat at tables drinking been, smoking, talking back and forth. I eased my way through to the smaller fridge of soft drinks that was tucked behind. I really have no desire to dull my senses in the middle of the day which I know a beer would do in this heat. The return train was much quieter - still a goodly number of passengers through to Sassari. The countryside here is interesting. Low but steep hills with patches of trees between tree grown, and rocky limestone (?) outcrops. Some sections of the railway have been rebuilt to eliminate some twists and turns, but other sections are still torturous.
I'm glad I took a look at Alghero, but it's not on my list to return. Seen enough. Sassari may warrant a return visit; I had an hour to look around but felt there was still more to see; had to rush back to the station.
Alghero is at the end of a narrow gauge railway that's not on my pass, but I visited for and extra £5 as it's one of the few remaining parts of the narrow network on Sardinia. Even this has been cut back to the top of the town - you can see where the tracks used to go.
Finding out the train times was a challenge. The line starts in Sassari, where the station has three working platforms and a ticket office labelled "We do not sell tickets for Alghero". The standard European departure sheets don't show these trains either. The "Sardinian Green Train" website tells us about the weekly special excursions on some of the otherwise abandoned lines where they are still passable. The ARST website (they run the narrow gauge trains) proudly concentrated on their buses, but I *had* actually found a timetable. Trains differ totally on Sundays from the rest of the week, but they are all in one table there than needs very careful reading. When I reached Sassari, I bought my ticket at the station newsagent and tobacconist kiosk - where the gent checked my timings an reassured me I was correct in my reading, and I could make a round trip before the next main line train, some 4 and a half hours later.
A modern 2 carriage train, and it would seem that while I had some problems knowing when it ran, others did not. Before we set off, it was full (almost) and some standing. Made me feel old - VERY old - young people off for a day on the beach, well behaved and laughing and joking between themselves. No-one got off at intermediate stations; more joined at Olmedo where we passed a train going the other way.
The station at Alghero has clearly seen better / busier days. Apart from the platform we arrived at, two others are rusted and there's other track work that hasn't seen a train, I suspect, this millenium. A crossover to allow run-rounds, and a turntable - redundant too now that the trains are current generation diesel units. An hourly service is possible with the loop half way, and that's probably more than enough. And I note that trains can be coupled and run in pairs.
I bought myself a can of cold Sprite in the station cafe. Two big fridges full of beer, blokes sat at tables drinking been, smoking, talking back and forth. I eased my way through to the smaller fridge of soft drinks that was tucked behind. I really have no desire to dull my senses in the middle of the day which I know a beer would do in this heat. The return train was much quieter - still a goodly number of passengers through to Sassari. The countryside here is interesting. Low but steep hills with patches of trees between tree grown, and rocky limestone (?) outcrops. Some sections of the railway have been rebuilt to eliminate some twists and turns, but other sections are still torturous.
I'm glad I took a look at Alghero, but it's not on my list to return. Seen enough. Sassari may warrant a return visit; I had an hour to look around but felt there was still more to see; had to rush back to the station.
I will add that I respect other's rights to enjoy those pastimes - just not for me. And I do (now) know that there's some pretty parts in Alghero - just a long way from where the only station is now.
There are 4 trains a day Sassari to Cagliari and it's 260 kms - about the same distance as from Exeter to London. Other trains come in along the way from Olbia, and a further set start at Macomer. We set off on time at 14:37 but got held up on the approach to Ozieri-Chilivani - reason not clear to me but could well have been signalling issues - and we dragged into the station there about 20 minutes late which was enough to put us out-of-path
The line is single all the way from Sassari as far as San Gavino - three quarters of the way to Cagliari - and the policy is clearly than once a train is delayed, in waits at loops (and there seem to be a reasonable number of those) for other trains - having one train seriously delayed rather than knocking out the entire system. Even south of Macomer the service is sparse enough to do that without the next train catching up and being delayed as well.
We arrived into Cagliari at 19:05, versus a schedule of 17:50. And I am here today until a minute to midnight, on the ferry to Naples.
| Re: Server slow ... In "News, Help and Assistance" [376185/30293/29] Posted by grahame at 02:55, 21st June 2026 | ![]() |
There have been a couple of "abnormal loads" on the worker server today. I *am* aware and will look through the logs overnight. The server emails me when it's in trouble and typical recovers over a few minutes when these things happen.
Normal request load is around 100 to 150 requests per minute. That rose to over 3,000 requests in the minutes that our server load spiked - automated requests systematically looking for URLs which are admin accesses to standard web server software that webmasters can accidentally leave open. I have characterised the requests and our server should now turn away such requests more quickly.
It probably wasn't designed as a specific attack on our server, and it wasn't on one of the main domains served - rather more I would see it as a piece of rogue software from a "naughty-boy" trawling the web through web sites that owners may have forgotten about / left insecure.
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376184/32151/51] Posted by grahame at 02:08, 21st June 2026 | ![]() |
As an administrator on this Coffee Shop forum, may I thank all of our members here for your restrained, non-speculative, posts about this sad incident.
The Rail Accident Investigation Branch will indeed discover all of the facts, and provide us with a definitive report, in due course.
CfN. -X
The Rail Accident Investigation Branch will indeed discover all of the facts, and provide us with a definitive report, in due course.
CfN. -X
Well confirmed, Chris. This is one of the most difficult "fine line"s that we tread on the Coffee Shop. I am reminded of a level crossing accident on The Marches line where it was obviously a car driver error - except that it turned out that it wasn't.
The aspect displayed by 358 upon the departure of the 360 will be interesting to discover.
The signalling maps show 358 displayed a single yellow.
356 displayed a red and then stepped up to a single yellow to crossover once the IET had cleared the section
154 remained at Red protecting the IET. 154 is not TPWS fitted.
This is what the signalling maps show but it must be remembered that the maps show what the signals are expected to show. This doesn’t confirm what the signals show on the ground.
This type of routing does carry a risk, especially if this is the usual type of routing.
What happens at 154 is key, especially with the AWS.
| Re: Recycling rubbish and charity shops - something of a minefield? Ongoing discussion In "The West - but NOT trains in the West" [376182/30854/31] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 22:32, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
Here in Nailsea, we have the benefit of a latter-day Steptoe & Son, who drive along our road every week in their pickup truck with a loudhailer asking for 'any old iron?'
They aren't choosy - any scrap metal will do (I noticed that the only thing they didn't want was a neighbour's old fridge/freezer).
We don't have to do anything, other than put our unwanted metal items out on the drive, where they can be seen from the road. Even if we don't hear the loudhailer (unlikely), they will come to the front door, just to confirm, "Is that to go?".
Recently, we updated our cooker and removed a redundant overhead extractor fan unit. My daughter and I will put those out on the drive and see how long it takes Steptoe & Son to snap them up.
They aren't choosy - any scrap metal will do (I noticed that the only thing they didn't want was a neighbour's old fridge/freezer).
We don't have to do anything, other than put our unwanted metal items out on the drive, where they can be seen from the road. Even if we don't hear the loudhailer (unlikely), they will come to the front door, just to confirm, "Is that to go?".
Recently, we updated our cooker and removed a redundant overhead extractor fan unit. My daughter and I will put those out on the drive and see how long it takes Steptoe & Son to snap them up.

An update from me: those scrap metal collectors were enthusiastic to be offered two slightly rusty bikes, our old electric cooker, overhead extractor fan, grill pans and filters. Basically, anything with some metal in it.

I shall do some more digging around, in our garage, to see whether there's anything else they can take away.
CfN.

As an administrator on this Coffee Shop forum, may I thank all of our members here for your restrained, non-speculative, posts about this sad incident.
The Rail Accident Investigation Branch will indeed discover all of the facts, and provide us with a definitive report, in due course.
CfN. -X
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376179/32151/51] Posted by Oxonhutch at 21:04, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
The aspect displayed by 358 upon the departure of the 360 will be interesting to discover.
| Re: Senior Railcard - some issues, developments and ongoing discussion In "Fare's Fair" [376178/26533/4] Posted by ChrisB at 21:00, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
They do if you buy / renew online.
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376177/32151/51] Posted by ChrisB at 20:54, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
Peter Hicks on X
Some context on the events at Elstow/Bedford this evening. There is a lot you can tell from train describer data on @OpenTrainTimes, however there is a lot of information that you cannot determine. The purple trace is the Class 360's movements, the green is the 810's.


and this has happened before (two trains in same section)
https://www.gov.uk/raib-reports/report-11-slash-2023-two-trains-in-the-same-signal-section-at-south-wingfield
| Re: Senior Railcard - some issues, developments and ongoing discussion In "Fare's Fair" [376175/26533/4] Posted by PhilWakely at 20:28, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
If you purchased your railcard from the ticket office, you will not have had a reminder letter. I know that railcard forms are sent off to Swindon, but TBMK they are just filed away. Why would you need to complete a new full application form if the powers that be knew your renewal date? I believe this is a major flaw in the system! If they have a database of season tickets, why not of railcards?
| Re: OTD - Queen Victoria was the first reigning British monarch to travel on a train In "Railway History and related topics" [376174/32130/55] Posted by stuving at 20:16, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
The first journey by a reigning British monarch on a train was made by Queen Victoria on June 13, 1842. She traveled on the British Royal Train from Slough to London’s Paddington Station, completing the trip in 25 minutes.
Who had been using this royal train if Victoria never had?
| Re: OTD - Queen Victoria was the first reigning British monarch to travel on a train In "Railway History and related topics" [376173/32130/55] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 19:58, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
Did Her Majesty complain about that?
No, probably not.

| Re: Senior Railcard - some issues, developments and ongoing discussion In "Fare's Fair" [376172/26533/4] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 19:56, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
Fair comment, ChrisB, but it wasn't a straight renewal: I was using a different e-mail address, so I had to set it up as a new application.
No problem at all, the cards merely overlap by one day.

| Re: Server slow ... In "News, Help and Assistance" [376171/30293/29] Posted by grahame at 19:51, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
There have been a couple of "abnormal loads" on the worker server today. I *am* aware and will look through the logs overnight. The server emails me when it's in trouble and typical recovers over a few minutes when these things happen.
| Re: Senior Railcard - some issues, developments and ongoing discussion In "Fare's Fair" [376170/26533/4] Posted by ChrisB at 19:48, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
If they knew it was a renewal, shouldn't they have started the new one on the day after the old one expired?
| Re: OTD - Queen Victoria was the first reigning British monarch to travel on a train In "Railway History and related topics" [376169/32130/55] Posted by Oxonhutch at 19:28, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
... She traveled on the British Royal Train from Slough to London’s Paddington Station, completing the trip in 25 minutes.
Apparently she hated travelling at speed as well, being familiar with horse drawn transport. Her fastest journey ever was her funeral train from Gosport to London which was running late.
| Re: Weather updates from across the UK and implications for infrastructure - 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376167/31355/51] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 19:17, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
Another update, from the BBC:
Extreme heat warning expanded as 36C heatwave approaches UK
The Met Office has expanded its amber extreme heat warning for Monday and Tuesday as forecasts suggest temperatures could climb to 36C (97F) in parts of the UK.
The warning means there are likely to be widespread impacts on people and infrastructure, with the risk of adverse health effects and disruption to travel.
Some locations could see temperatures above 30C (86F) for six or seven consecutive days, with overnight temperatures remaining above 20C (68F) in places. It is consistent with predictions that heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense globally due to human-induced climate change.
For a hot spell to officially become a heatwave, temperatures must exceed a threshold - which varies from 25-28C (77-82F) in different parts of the country - for three consecutive days.
There are parts of eastern England that have so far recorded two days above this threshold so a third, on Saturday, would mean a heatwave being declared.
However it is possible that maximum temperatures may fall slightly short of these highs. The highest temperatures are focused in the south and east of the UK with cooler conditions further north. You can check the forecast temperatures for your area on the BBC Weather website and app.
(BBC article continues, with graphics and explanations)
The Met Office has expanded its amber extreme heat warning for Monday and Tuesday as forecasts suggest temperatures could climb to 36C (97F) in parts of the UK.
The warning means there are likely to be widespread impacts on people and infrastructure, with the risk of adverse health effects and disruption to travel.
Some locations could see temperatures above 30C (86F) for six or seven consecutive days, with overnight temperatures remaining above 20C (68F) in places. It is consistent with predictions that heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense globally due to human-induced climate change.
For a hot spell to officially become a heatwave, temperatures must exceed a threshold - which varies from 25-28C (77-82F) in different parts of the country - for three consecutive days.
There are parts of eastern England that have so far recorded two days above this threshold so a third, on Saturday, would mean a heatwave being declared.
However it is possible that maximum temperatures may fall slightly short of these highs. The highest temperatures are focused in the south and east of the UK with cooler conditions further north. You can check the forecast temperatures for your area on the BBC Weather website and app.
(BBC article continues, with graphics and explanations)
My highlighting. CfN.
| Re: OTD - Queen Victoria was the first reigning British monarch to travel on a train In "Railway History and related topics" [376166/32130/55] Posted by broadgage at 18:49, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
It was alleged that Queen Victoria, disliked passing through tunnels on the Royal Train, and that the Catford loop line was built in order to avoid Penge Tunnel.
| Re: Senior Railcard - some issues, developments and ongoing discussion In "Fare's Fair" [376165/26533/4] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 18:43, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
Last year, I registered for my first Senior Railcard - despite having actually qualified for one, several years before. 
I have used it on my recent train tickets, without any challenge: there is no photo ID on the Railcard, but I suspect that my increasingly greying hair leads railway staff to think, 'yes, he's an old git'.
Nevertheless, I keep my Senior Railcard in my wallet, next to my Driving Licence - which does have photo ID - just in case I am ever challenged.

I have used it on my recent train tickets, without any challenge: there is no photo ID on the Railcard, but I suspect that my increasingly greying hair leads railway staff to think, 'yes, he's an old git'.

Nevertheless, I keep my Senior Railcard in my wallet, next to my Driving Licence - which does have photo ID - just in case I am ever challenged.

My own Senior Railcard came up for expiry on 21 June 2026. Indeed, the very diligent train manager on my train to Melksham on 25 May pointed that out to me, during her ticket check - I was fully aware of the expiry date, but I thought it was excellent customer service that she mentioned it.
I applied online for a renewal on Sunday 14 June 2026. The plastic card arrived here in the post today, 20 June 2026, with an expiry date of 20 June 2027 - exactly one year from the date of receipt. I'm very happy with that - my thanks to The Railcard Team.

CfN.

Indeed, likely to simply be a statement of (some) facts rather than reasons....along with any immediate safety concerns that need immediate action.
Update from 1230 news conference reported in many outlets - 9 remain critical in hospital along with 28 less seriously injured.
BBC quoting that an (interim, I'm sure) update will come from the RAIB in coming days. Makes sense especially if there are safety issues to be addressed that are generally significant. RAIB seem much quicker at the interim reporting than they used to be.
The Rail Accident Investigation Branch (RAIB), who is working with the British Transport Police (BTP) to establish the facts and determine what happened before the crash, says a further update will be provided "in the coming days".
In a statement on X, the branch says: "RAIB inspectors continue to gather evidence at the site of yesterday's collision between two trains near Elstow.
"RAIB will conduct a full, independent safety investigation into this tragic accident.
"We will provide a further update in the coming days once we know more."
In a statement on X, the branch says: "RAIB inspectors continue to gather evidence at the site of yesterday's collision between two trains near Elstow.
"RAIB will conduct a full, independent safety investigation into this tragic accident.
"We will provide a further update in the coming days once we know more."
At this stage that will not be an interim report, but a preliminary one (though not really a report at all) - very different. Any investigation needs planning, scoping, allocation of staff, consideration of immediate actions (legal or technical), etc. That will be based on the facts that can be collected with no real investigating, including many not known to the public or media. It has been found valuable to publish a summary of what is known at this point, before the investigation proper starts. For one thing is helps to stop a lot of wild speculation and misreporting, and less wild too.
An interim report happens after most of the investigation results are available, but before the final report can be written. Again one of the main reasons for one is to stop too much speculation about the content of the final report, particularly if that is taking a long time.
For some reason the terms are often used interchangeably.
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376162/32151/51] Posted by grahame at 15:55, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
BBC quoting that an (interim, I'm sure) update will come from the RAIB in coming days. Makes sense especially if there are safety issues to be addressed that are generally significant. RAIB seem much quicker at the interim reporting than they used to be.
The Rail Accident Investigation Branch (RAIB), who is working with the British Transport Police (BTP) to establish the facts and determine what happened before the crash, says a further update will be provided "in the coming days".
In a statement on X, the branch says: "RAIB inspectors continue to gather evidence at the site of yesterday's collision between two trains near Elstow.
"RAIB will conduct a full, independent safety investigation into this tragic accident.
"We will provide a further update in the coming days once we know more."
In a statement on X, the branch says: "RAIB inspectors continue to gather evidence at the site of yesterday's collision between two trains near Elstow.
"RAIB will conduct a full, independent safety investigation into this tragic accident.
"We will provide a further update in the coming days once we know more."
| Re: How would YOU solve CrossCountry ? In "Across the West" [376161/32138/26] Posted by eightonedee at 15:41, 20th June 2026 | ![]() |
There's an immediate problem with this approach Ibraine.
If you look at the destinations currently covered by Cross Country, you'll see that thre are " strings" of urban areas that together have larger populations, like Southampton and Bournemouth/Christchurch/Poole, or Banbury/Oxford/Reading/Basingstoke, or Taunton/Exeter/Plymouth. Many of the conurbations you mention already are connected by the main line network radiating out of London or lie close together with reasonable existing links.
I think that the current Cross Country network is just about right, possibly only needing a few trains to Liverpool, Plymouth or Brighton to be better, but I perfectly understand that line capacity constraints and the relatively modest additional fare revenue might not justify this or make it possible.
All it needs is some longer trains (it borders on the criminal that after nearly two years of a new government with a minister from the rail industry they have Voyager units stored out of use)
and some work on pathing of trains and timetabling to eliminate as many conflicts that usually seem resolved at the expense of Cross Country trains, notwithstanding the generous lay over periods at stops like Reading, and you should have something really useful. I am heartened to read some positive comments in this thread to support this view.
And no, I don't see limits on access to services for shorter distance travellers or increasing other parallel services (for which there's probably not the line capacity) as necessary. If there's more seats on lengthened trains that should address the issue. The occasional full and standing evening rush hour train between New Street and Leamington is a price we should be happy to pay for the convenience of through trains between the South Coast/Thames Valley and Birmingham and the North and we shouldn't begrudge some West Midlands commuters using them to get home a little earlier. Sit back, relax and look forward to enjoying the countryside down to Oxford once they have got off.
| Re: Shortage of train crews on Great Western Railway - ongoing discussion In "Across the West" [376159/18719/26] Posted by bobm at 11:58, 20th June 2026 Already liked by Mark A | ![]() |
As ever I think there are some other shortforms not mentioned on Journeycheck.
The 08:48 London Paddington to Pembroke Dock should be 10 as far as Swansea before the rear five continues to West Wales.
Today it is five all the way but at least, unlike last week, it is getting past Swansea.














